The Mel Robbins Podcast - Conquer Overwhelm: Your Ultimate Guide to Inner Peace With the Amazing Dr. Thema Bryant
Episode Date: October 12, 2023In this episode, Dr. Thema Bryant gives you the tools to conquer overwhelm and unlock your inner peace.Dr. Thema Bryant is the current president of the American Psychological Association. She trained ...at both Duke and Harvard, teaches at Pepperdine University, has published multiple best-selling books, and has spent decades of her life researching how you can stay calm and centered in any situation.She calls this kind of peace “coming home” to yourself, and she will teach you how to do it, even if the world around you is in chaos.Dr. Thema is simply incredible. Just her presence alone will put you at ease. She has the unique gift of weaving together psychological strategies for healing with the deeper spiritual cornerstones of faith and trust.This is an encore episode with new insights from me at the top of the conversation. Given how overwhelming the world seems right now, I believe this profound and actionable conversation is exactly what you and I need to hear.With Dr. Thema's wisdom and tools, you can and will overcome the overwhelm, anxiety, and stress you are feeling right now.In this episode, you’ll learn:3 ways to combat overwhelm and external stress.6 signs that you are disconnected from yourself.What it means to be "psychologically wandering".How to handle people in your life who are chronically irritable and angry.The surprising signs of "irritable depression".The 3 words to say to yourself before you can begin healing.Why self-care is critical if you are in a toxic workplace.Why you need to stop talking about your partner and your boss in therapy.Where to find therapy when you can’t afford it. When the world feels dark, you and I must stay connected to our inner light. This episode will teach you how. Please share this with your loved ones because the world needs all of us to keep the light bright, and together we will. Xo, Mel In this episode:2:15: I got really emotional when I acknowledged how my life used to be.4:00: This is what it looks like when you’re connected to your own compass.6:30: The 6 signs that you’re disconnected from yourself and what that means.9:05: Even if you’ve never felt it; you can learn to be “home” with yourself.10:50: The West African fable that should be required reading for everyone.16:11: This is the first and most powerful step to your “homecoming.”21:45: Do people with a bad attitude actually have depression?24:50: What is healing, anyway?26:08: How do we handle people who are irritable, frustrated, and angry?29:40: It’s a big mistake if you wait for this before you start your own healing.32:40: What does self-care actually mean?34:10: Watching bedtime, high-crime TV? Then you need to hear this.36:50: How to know if you need therapy or you need spirituality.38:30: What is the definition of spirituality?41:20: How do you heal from a lifetime of messaging that you’re not worthy?44:00: This is how you handle being in a toxic work environment.47:30: You are more than an employee or a partner. 48:50: Look to these resources if you can’t afford therapy. Want more resources? Go to my podcast page at https://melrobbins.com/podcast.Disclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Hey, there's a lot going on right now.
And so I've made the decision to switch up our programming this week and re-run an episode
that we did back in May that was called Six Signs Are Disconnected From Your Power and
How to Get It Back, Life Changing Advicechanging advice from the remarkable Dr. Tama Bryant. I decided to re-release this episode because I think
the world really would benefit from listening to this.
Our show is syndicated in 194 countries, and right now there is a lot of conflict going
on in regions around the world. And there has never been a better time to provide tools and hope and small ways
that you as an individual can empower yourself and live in the truth and also stay connected to
light and to love and to connection. And Dr. Tamma is the person who can teach you how to do it.
She's a psychologist, a minister, a tenured professor at Pepper to do it. She's a psychologist, a minister,
a tenured professor at Pepperdine University.
She's a New York Times bestselling author.
In 2023, she was named the very first black female president
of the American Psychological Association.
She completed her doctorate in clinical psychology
at Duke University and her postdoctoral training
at Harvard Medical Schools Victims of Violence Program.
She says that no matter what's going on around you,
you can always come back home to yourself.
And that's what we're gonna talk about today.
The six signs that you're disconnected from yourself.
And most importantly, how you can start to reconnect.
I hope you love this conversation as much as
I did. I just relisten to it and I know it's exactly what you need right now.
Dr. Tama, I am so thrilled that you are here. I am thrilled to be here.
I love you.
I love your work.
And I love getting the word out about the journey home because we need it.
Oh, do we ever, you know, I was, I'm pretty emotional today because I'm here in Los Angeles
because one of our daughters is graduating from college in a couple days and
I am going after our interview to her final
senior performance
beautiful and
It's a full circle moment because I'm going to the theater where she
got her invitation to audition to even be admitted into the program and
I've been calling it a full circle moment,
but what I realize is it's a homecoming.
It is.
And I guess that's where I want to start.
It makes me emotional to think about this
because I lived for so long
feeling what you would call
Psychologically homeless. Yes disconnected from my true self and
the feeling
that you have
when you finally feel
whole
It is unlike anything I've ever experienced.
Yes.
And I appreciate the honesty and the transparency
because we do get disconnected.
You know, life disconnects us.
So psychological homelessness is this sense of wandering, being ungrounded, unrooted, confused, and we can
spend years saying, I don't know, I'm not sure. And even when I'm waiting for other people
to give me the answer, then they're my compass. But I need a compass. That's what we talk about with therapy
is at some point people need to internalize it.
So it's not just every week people come in saying,
so, Tama, what do you think?
Yeah.
They have to get to the point where I was having
this conversation with my sister
and I realized I was doing this.
And so there it is.
Right now you have become your compass right yeah so how could you
tell you were disconnected or what was it like when you were psychologically wandering it felt like
there was the physical me walking around in my life doing the things that we all do, getting up, going to work, taking
care of the kids, calling friends, watching TV. But there was a part of me that was separate
that felt, I guess you could call it like a knowing, just on autopilot, just feeling no spiritual center, no connection to values,
just existing.
And so I guess it would be for me this feeling of separateness.
Yeah, separated from yourself and it separated from other people because you're surrounded
by people, but they don't really see.
You can fool a lot of people including yourself, right?
So a part of homecoming is telling yourself the truth
and then living based on that truth
that you tell yourself, right?
Because I can lie to myself that social script is I'm fine,
I'm fine.
And you know, I mean, a lot of faith-based communities
and the term is like, I'm blessed.
Right? It's like, yeah, you can be blessed
and also have a lot going on.
Yeah.
Bless and lost.
So, that awakening, what I like to say,
and I think I said in the book,
is, can we get to the place where we can admit
I miss myself?
Wow.
Okay.
I just want to make sure that you listening to us just got what Dr. Tama just said to you.
I miss myself.
Yeah.
How does somebody who feels like they don't even know who they are? Like, you hear that a lot?
I don't even know who I am.
Yes, yeah.
I would love for you to read these six questions that can be a sign of what you call psychological
homelessness.
So here are the questions.
Does the state of your life internally or externally fall short of what you imagined?
Did you attain what you thought you wanted only to discover that you still feel empty and
unfulfilled?
Do you have a sense of powerlessness or hopelessness?
Do you lack the energy or motivation to pursue the things
that used to matter to you?
Do you feel there are no words to capture the ache
in your heart?
Do you find yourself crying often
or does it seem impossible to cry?
If somebody resonates with any of those questions,
yeah, what should they do?
Yes. So I want to first say to anyone who connected with those questions,
you've taken the first step, which is awareness,
because I can't come home to myself if I don't realize I'm wandering.
Right?
Sometimes we don't realize that you can,
time is passing and you don't know it.
So the fact that in this moment as you're listening,
you chose to tell yourself the truth.
That is your mind, heart, body, spirit telling to you,
we're ready, right? Because when we don't feel ready, you know, we're
distracting ourselves, we're busying ourselves, and then truth shows up. So telling yourself,
the truth is the first step. And then we think about both self-care and community care.
about both self-care and community care. And sometimes when we don't feel good about ourselves,
we neglect ourselves and we erase ourselves
and those can have cultural messages
and gender messages and religious messages
where people will say self-care is selfish.
Right.
You know?
And so to say to myself, I am not just a tool for other people's nourishing.
I am not just a pathway for other people to get goodness in life, that I too am a living
soul that is deserving of the goodness that I want other people to experience.
So I like to say even if you feel like you were never at home with yourself,
you can still come home to yourself. And that is a reality for a lot of people
who grew up with stress and trauma, who perhaps were born into families where there was a lot of stress and trauma. So you learned early to be in survival mode or you learn to play small or you
learn to people please. And so you never got to, but I like to call unfold, right?
You never got to connect with the truth of who you are. I also want to say when we are in unhealthy relationships
and on toxic jobs, in order to survive those,
you have to disconnect.
Mm.
It's impossible to be at home with yourself
and stay in relationship with someone
who is dishonoring you perpetually.
Wow.
Yeah.
perpetually. Wow. Yeah. So for somebody that just had like, yes, a wake up call. Mm-hmm. Then you can have compassion for yourself because people will judge you and say,
like, why'd you stay so long? Right. But you weren't connected to you. You had been disconnected from yourself, so you don't even feel the capacity to dream
again, to imagine, to believe that better is possible for you and that you are deserving
of it and worthy of it.
And so even if you have never met you, you can come home to you.
And that's kind of the good news of this process.
Wow.
There's a West African fable that you tell at the very beginning
of the book that I think will give us a visual
and a story to lock on to that we can keep coming back to
to help keep people in the conversation.
Yeah.
So would you mind telling us that is it a fable?
What do you, yeah, you can say it's a faible.
I lived in Liberia, West Africa for high school.
So I'm going to do it in my version of Liberian English,
but any Liberians who are listening will tell you,
oh, that's not the true.
So once upon a time, once upon a time in West Africa,
there was one animal expert.
And this animal expert knew every animal that was in the bush.
You people say, far as, but the real word is bush.
If he's the giraffe, you know the danger of.
If you see lion, you know the thing lion.
So this animal expert is walking one day, so, so, so,
and he goes behind one farm. And he's passing the farm and behind the farm, he sees so, so, so, and he goes behind one farm.
And he's passing the farm and behind the farm, he sees so, so, so chickens.
And the middle of the chickens is one eagle.
He said, what are you doing with these chickens?
He goes to the front of the farm and he say, bop, bop.
You people say knock, knock, the real sound that's bop, bop.
He said, bop, bop.
The man inside say, who that?
The man outside say that me.
You might open the door and see.
So he opens the door.
He said, what your business here?
He said, in the back of your farm,
you got so, so, so chickens.
But in the middle, it's one ego.
The farmer laughed.
He said, no, I only have chicken.
The animal experts that I'll show you,
they go to the back of the farm.
He picks up the one he's calling an eagle.
He puts it on his arm.
He says, listen to me.
You not chicken.
Chickens can't fly.
You can fly.
Go ahead and fly.
The eagle listened to him, but then he looked down at his chicken brothers and sisters,
eating their chicken food.
He jumped down off the man's arm and he go back with the chickens.
The farmer starts laughing at the animal expert.
The animal expert is Vex.
He said, I come in a go.
He storm away.
The next day, he come back.
He comes so soon in the morning,
God himself was not awake yet.
He come and say, what?
Bop, pop.
The man is, I say who that?
The man outside say that.
He opened the door and see.
He opens the door.
He takes him.
He says, what are you doing here?
He said, I came here because you have one ego.
This time he took the ego and he climbed to the roof of the barn.
They get to the top of the barn and at that moment,
the sun started to rise.
Eh? The animal expert says to the top of the barn and at that moment, the sun started to rise.
The animal expert says to the eagle, all your life, people told you you were a chicken.
They told you talk like chicken, act like chicken,
walk like chicken, but you're not a chicken, you're an eagle.
The eagle said to himself,
I think if I don't try this thing,
this man will come every day bothering me.
Maybe today I will try it.
So he spread his wings and he started to fly.
And I tell you, my eyes could never see him again.
And that's the whole reason why you and I are here today
because there are those who are listening
who have been treated like chickens,
dating, like chickens, picking jobs, like chickens,
but you're not a chicken, you're an ego, so fly.
Oh, I just gotta do that right now.
Oh my gosh.
That is why this book is required reading for everyone.
In fact, I would love for you to read this part.
The eagle made it home.
He made it to the truth of who he was.
This is homecoming.
I wrote this book for all of you who at different points in your life
have found yourself living like someone you are
not. You may have started acting different because of how you were treated or what other
people told you about yourself or how you saw others acting. You have not felt comfortable
or safe enough to truly be yourself or to feel at home in your identity. The recognized and unrecognized traumas of your past
may have taught you to hide your gifts and voice
in order to survive.
This book facilitates your journey back to who you really are
so you can own your full identity and fly.
Beautiful.
Thank you.
Thank you.
So many of us are hungry for more,
like you have the sense this can't be it.
Right, like this, this just can't be it, right?
And whatever area of my life,
and so to know the healing is work,
but we're worth it, right?
And when we are not at home,
we're paying a cost anyway.
How much has it cost me to live some other woman's life?
Ah, I don't wanna pay it anymore.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It costs you your life.
Right, it costs you your life, absolutely. It costs you your life. Absolutely.
So let's walk through the process of homecoming. Yes. I'm an eagle in disguise as a chicken. Right. I come in.
Yeah. And I want to begin this journey. Yes. But I don't know I'm an eagle. Right. Yeah.
How do we start? I start every session with the breath.
Okay.
Because we're so busy and scattered
and we have been tricked, duped, hoodwinked into believing
I can prove my worthiness with my busyness.
And so people can come in, you know,
running a million miles and have believed themselves
that if I'm so productive, I must be at home.
But we often are not.
And so I invite people to take a moment,
to tune into their breath, to inhale in through the nose,
and exhale out through the nose
and exhale out through the mouth
and to begin to scan their bodies, noticing any place where you're holding tension
and sending breath throughout the body,
giving yourself permission to breathe and release. As we said, intentions for self-compassion
and for clarity. And that's how we begin. I feel different. Yeah, right. Tell me the different. Yeah. Right?
Tell me the different.
What did you notice?
I just noticed that my mind went quiet and I dropped out of my head and into my body.
That's it.
And there was a slowing that kind of went with this knowing. Right. This feels better than the thoughts that are racing,
that it feels better.
What's it feel like for you?
Right.
It is the homecoming.
And that's a part of the closing our eyes
or lowering our gaze is when we're open,
we're open to all the stimulation around us.
And especially if you're a trauma survivor,
you are tuned into other people, right?
So what are they thinking?
What are they feeling?
What do they need?
It's dangerous to relax.
When you're a victim of trauma and discrimination
of violence.
Yeah, right.
And many of us suppress and run and hide.
And that heightens the belief that I can't see myself,
right, that keeps us running.
So instead to give people permission and with the support,
because they're not having to face it by themselves,
I'm with them to actually tune in
to what's going on in there,
and to start to look at what are the signs of my
disconnection.
So that's where the journey begins for us to notice, right?
Where is my disconnection showing up in me?
So if homecoming means feeling connected to your most authentic self, Yes. What are the signs of this connection?
So when we are in a place of feeling powerless, hopelessness, despair, those are indicators
that we have lost sight of our power and voice.
Because the truth is we do have capacity, voice and agency, but we've been in environments
where that
wasn't welcomed or that wasn't responded to.
And so then that can leave us feeling like we're empty.
Yes, right?
Yes.
The word that keeps coming to mind is purpose.
So you hear a lot of people say, I don't know what my purpose is.
I need to find a purpose.
Is that a code word for I am disconnected from myself?
That is definitely a co-word. When people don't have a
sense of their purpose, that's an indication of disconnection. Yes. And there's a story you
told in the book about being at a event where you're giving one of the bazillion keynote
speeches that you give. And a survivor of sexual abuse comes up to you.
Can you share that story after we hear a quick word
from our sponsors?
Yes.
Awesome.
We'll be right back. I'm Mel Robbins and I'm here with the extraordinary Dr.
Tama Bryan. We're talking about our new book Homecoming and the process of returning
back home to yourself. And Dr. Tama was just about to tell us a story of something
that happened after Shkavikino's speech at a conference. So I was speaking at a conference on sexual assault
and I'm a sexual assault survivor.
And I give the presentation and when it's over,
people are responding really well.
And then I'm standing there in this line,
which I know you are used to.
And there's a long line of people waiting
to kind of share their response
or their connection to what you said.
And I see toward the back of the line,
this woman who we would say had a bad attitude, right?
But I know attitude is despair.
But hold on a second.
Uh-huh.
Attitude is despair.
Yeah.
So a form of depression people often don't recognize is irritable depression.
Right?
Yeah.
Wow.
And people don't respond to compassion with compassion to women with a quote unquote bad attitude.
But if we said when I see that woman she's in despair, maybe then I would respond with compassion. But some of us, by family, by culture, by religion,
were taught that sadness is weakness.
So we mask our sadness with anger,
with bitterness, with attitude, right?
But underneath it is the despair.
So true.
Yeah, it's like a iceberg.
You see the anger on the top, but there's something so much deeper going on deeper underneath.
Wow. Yeah. So you could pick up on the attitude and the energy. But I know there's the story there. Yeah.
Especially because when you know you haven't done anything. Right. So I am feeling on the receiving end of your upset and I haven't done anything so that I know
there's a story. So you know when it gets to be her place she's next in the line and she says to
me with the attitude so you're a survivor and I say look I just gave a whole keynote on it.
Right. I say yes and she says, you don't look like any survivor
I've ever known.
So the doubting can be triggering as we think about not
being believed.
But then I go deeper than that and decide not to get defensive.
Instead, I just let her question slash statement hang in the air. And I just,
what I would say soften. Right. I soften and I just look at her and it's like now she can see me.
Like on the stage with my PowerPoint and my pants suit, she couldn't see me, right?
She could only see the strength and the oratorical skills.
But now standing in front of her kind of woman to woman, she could see the vulnerability.
And seeing the vulnerability, she said, the only survivors I've ever known were fat and poor like me.
Right. It's the different ways our surviving shows up. And for some of us who are often overlooked,
up. And for some of us who are often overlooked, we coped with anger, with bitterness, with attitude, but underneath is despair. And some of us, we coped with busyness and with what
I would call a spirit of excellence. And when you are excellent, people don't notice your wounds.
And sometimes you don't notice them.
You feel you've outrun it.
Yes.
But it's there late at night, early in the morning,
when you're in certain environments,
it shows up that it's still bleeding
and you've just gotten busy, but not healed.
What is healing?
Yeah.
So it is the homecoming of accepting and loving of myself.
When I accept me, I have nothing to prove. There's a life coach here in Los Angeles.
a life coach here in Los Angeles.
Shannon Event, she has a beautiful quote I love, which is, I don't want to be driven,
I want to be called.
And this idea of like when you're driven,
your trauma can drive you.
Like your insecurity can, you know where,
you have to constantly prove yourself
and it's this franticness
versus when I'm at home, then I can be in flow with what is me. Yeah. Wow.
If you have somebody in your life who has that irritable depression, yeah.
that irritable depression. Yeah.
Mm-hmm.
How do you practice softening and compassion?
Because oftentimes if you're around somebody who's constantly irritable, who is always angry
about or frustrated with something, I have several people that come to mind right now in
my own life.
Yeah.
What are some tools that we can use to practice more compassion in those moments?
Yeah.
And I love that question because I think what we often get pulled into is being combative
with them and they're always going to out combat us because they're in warrior mode.
Right. they're in warrior mode, right? And so, you know, when they come with the intensity, then
I respond to the softness. And I would say one of two ways. One is if I, if I can relate
it all, I'll give my own experience, right? And that helps them not to feel judged, right?
I'm not saying like calling you out because I see what you're doing is just saying, you know,
there was a time where, and often I have learned transparency is contagious.
And sometimes then people say, oh, me too.
Like, yeah, you too.
So the testimonial or if I know anything that's been happening in their life to name that,
because they're responding with all this intensity.
So then I will say, well, I really wanted to check in because I know this is such a busy
time with you, you know, that you're moving, that you're this, that you're that.
And for us to ask a deeper question, because the how are you
gives us finding you, right? So break out of the script. And so instead with everything
you're holding, you know, what's been helping you to manage, right? Or what do you need?
Or how can I help? So I'm speaking to the unspoken. If you bring in the chicken and the eagle,
can we use that fable to describe that moment
where the survivor in the audience has this irritable,
depressive moment with you?
What is happening for her in your opinion as a psychologist?
Yeah. So I'd like to say the reason you feel unsettled is because you're not supposed to
settle. Say that again. The reason you feel unsettled is because you're not supposed to settle. So what area of your life are you settling?
And I would imagine that any area where you feel unsettled.
So you know, what happens is often we are focused so much outwardly, if only, if only my spouse would do this,
if only my kids would do this,
if only my supervisor would do this.
And we don't have the capacity to shift them.
So how might you want to shift?
That's a big ask.
Because it's easier to try to order everybody else around
the world.
Oh yes.
And frustrating and knowing and draining,
but it also lets me off the hook
because I can keep waiting for their homecoming, right?
Well, everybody is on their own timing.
And what I'd like to remind myself
is I don't want to keep my healing hostage
waiting for the healing of those who harmed me.
Oh. Wow. Mm-hmm. And that's what we're doing when we're waiting for the apology.
Yeah. It's like, I can't heal till you see what you did to me. Yes.
Like, that could be years. It might be your whole life. Yeah. It may be your whole life.
Right? They have gone on with their lives. They don't care. They're not thinking about it. And so I want to take my healing out of their
hands and give it back to yourself. Yeah. And so the process of coming home and the home
coming is the act of self healing. Yes. It's about joining back in with yourself. And so it is a sacred act to begin to care for ourselves.
And the catch is when we talk about behavioral psychology,
with behavioral psychology, you start to do the action
even if you don't feel it yet, right?
So if I say like, I'm gonna wait till I have
high self-esteem and then take
good care of myself, like it's not gonna work. So I have to start doing it even when I don't
feel it. Yes, right? Yes. Let's take a quick pause so we can hear a word from our sponsors
and we'll be right back with more from Dr. Tamabrian.
Welcome back.
I'm Mel Robbins, and I'm here with the extraordinary Dr. Tamabrian.
We're talking about our new book, Homecoming, and the process of returning back home to
yourself.
So the first step is to recognize
that you're disconnected from yourself.
You talk to us about breathing.
Yeah.
Close your eyes, come back into your body.
You've talked also about self care.
What does that mean?
Self care.
Yeah.
So it is a sacred act to begin to care for ourselves. So self-care is nourishing
every part of yourself. So there is the physical part. It is hard to heal and come home to yourself
if you're living out of vending machines and drive through windows. Why? Because your food affects your mood.
And there's nothing life-giving in fake food.
Yeah.
I like to say, as your grandmother would say,
put some vegetables on that plate.
Put some greens on that plate.
So fruit and vegetables I like to think of,
before I eat something, can I say,
I'm eating this because I love myself.
Then some things I won't be able to put in my body
because I actually want to live.
And we have it flipped where we will call those things
the treat.
I am treating myself by giving myself something
that's killing me.
So to have to flip it.
And of course, in moderation,
because when people hear that, they're like,
do you mean I could never have, right?
And drinking water instead of all the soda,
sleep is a big one.
It is hard to come home to yourself when you're exhausted.
You know, we are busy, busy,
and then all night, people are on their
phones or, you know, up and can't sleep. And I say, if your idea and hopefully this is
okay to say whatever you want. Yes. If your idea of relaxing before you go to sleep is
watching three episodes of Law and Order. I would encourage you to think about
why is trauma relaxing to me?
Oh.
That's what it is.
I mean, it's harm, crime, violation, attacks,
and that's what is gonna soothe me into my bedtime.
So what is the answer?
Yeah, that a lot of people give you
when they do go into therapy
about that connection.
It's that it's normal and familiar.
Some of us grew up in high stress.
So we think calmness is either fake or boring.
Wow.
Right?
People mistake peace for boring. And it's like to come home to yourself,
you have to lean into the discomfort because it's because it's going to feel unfamiliar.
I was working with a client, an adult woman and her mom, and they had been disconnected
because the mother dealt with addiction and didn't raise her, and they had been disconnected
because the mother dealt with addiction and didn't raise her,
but they are reconnected now and living together.
And the adult daughter really wanted her mom
to say she loves her.
And the mother just said to me,
that just seems fake.
So she had not grown up with that, had not heard it
to her, it's like something people do on TV.
And so I said to her, if you mean it, it's not fake.
It just feels like it,
because you're not used to saying it.
Mm.
It is amazing how many people don't tell the people
that they love, that they love them.
Right.
And I hadn't occurred to me.
It's because they never were told that themselves.
Yeah.
And that it might feel forced or not authentic.
Yes.
Whoa.
Yeah. And that's the importance of us learning each other's
love languages because, you know,
her response was the response of probably many of her
generation, which was you had food on the table
or you have a roof over your head.
Yes, what more do you want from me?
Right.
What more?
What more?
I love also that there is a deeply spiritual aspect to this.
So what is sort of the, how would you describe the difference between therapy and spirituality
and the work that you need to do in both areas?
That's right.
So unfortunately, many people who are in the mental health field did not get trained to incorporate
spirituality.
There's research that shows on average mental health professionals endorse a lower level
of spirituality or religiosity than the general public.
Really?
Yes.
Why do you think that is?
Well, a part of that can go with higher levels of education, that a lot of times people with education
can feel like they need to prove everything. And spirituality is beyond our proving or our being able
to manipulate it. So it's like, it's not concrete, right?
In the field of psychology, the founders in the field
were often people of faith,
but then there was this move in the field
where we wanted to prove we're a science.
So if we wanna prove that we're a science,
then we can't talk about anything.
People find spooky or soft or, you know, in some other realm.
And so there has been neglect from it from that area
and the other part of it has been the recognition
that some people have been harmed in spiritual spaces.
So then some therapists will over generalize
and think that it is all harmful.
As opposed to whenever you get people together,
you're gonna have some good and some bad,
some things that are healthier, unhealthy.
What is your definition of spirituality?
It is an awareness of the sacred beyond what we can see.
Oh, I love that definition.
And now that we're on this topic, it occurs to me,
how could you possibly heal without pulling faith
and a belief that something that you have not experienced
is possible?
That's it, 100%.
Cause I even say to be a therapist, social worker,
life coach, any of these things, you have to have faith and for people to show up.
There has to be a faith that there can be more
than what I have seen and what I have experienced.
It's like when I'm counseling people
have only had unhealthy relationships
and I have to say just because this one is better
doesn't mean it's good, right?
If you just used a bad treatment,
if people I call you back, you're like,
oh, right, they call me back. It's like, that was nice, but there's more. There's more.
Yes. Yes. How do you combine the spiritual practice with the work to start to heal or as you say,
repair it yourself in the physical space.
That's right.
So a part of it is what gives us the motivation
to do the work because a lot of times we're operating
based on evidence, which is what we've seen.
So if I've only had bad experiences,
my parents abandoned me, this person left me,
this person mistreated me.
If I believe that is all that exists,
then the conclusion would be, I am unworthy.
That's the only possible right conclusion,
because victim blaming, self-blaming,
of if I deserved better, I would have received better.
And you will hear people blaming other people
for being mistreated, you know, they'll say,
oh, well, you must have allowed it.
And so in order for me to come to a different conclusion,
that I am worthy of what I have not yet experienced,
I have to have the belief of the more.
How the heck do you do that with your whole life?
You have experienced either abuse or mistreatment or discrimination or violence.
How do you when you have evidence that does make you feel unworthy?
Because I'm sure you get these DMs and these emails all day long. So do we.
Yeah.
A people who so want to believe that they are worthy,
that something is better,
that they can change your life for the better.
And you and I can sit where we are and go,
of course you can.
Yes.
But for somebody who is sitting in the disbelief.
Yeah.
How do you cross over?
Right.
To belief. Yeah. So it's a couple of levels. One of them is
to get people to reflect on
what do they believe all human beings deserve?
Well, I believe I'm a chicken. They're at all. I see your chickens. Well, and I believe I'm on the ground.
You know what I'm saying? Like we go back to this. Yeah. You possibly convinced yourself that it could be an eagle
if you've never seen one.
Yes, yes.
So what we connect with is disrupting
what we call the cognitive distortions.
So it's not just,
That's a big word.
What is cognitive distortions?
So your false thought, the lies.
Okay.
The lies you told yourself and the lies other people told you.
But let me give you an example. Okay. The lies you told yourself and the lies other people told you. Let me give you an
example. Okay, please. So for people who were molested, they either were told directly or indirectly
that that is their fault, right? That it's because they developed early or it's because they shouldn't have been over there or whatever it is that somehow that's on you.
And so we have to demonstrate that that is a lie.
So how do I demonstrate that that is a lie?
Does every girl who develops breast early
deserve to be molested?
Of course not.
early deserve to be molested. Of course not. So you are not an exception to that rule. Oh yeah, I see. Yeah. I can see another lie because I'm a survivor of that kind of abuse. Yeah. It's the shsh.
Don't tell anyone, or you'll get in trouble.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And what I learned about that, as I for my own journey, is I was taught that keeping quiet
kept the peace
until I realized whose peace is it keeping.
Oh.
Oh, right.
The offenders at peace, the people who don't wanna deal
with it at peace, and I in this little body
am holding all of the war.
I don't wanna hold it anymore.
Wow.
Yeah.
You know, this is what we're taught.
You're going to upset things.
You're going to upset people.
Nobody wants to hear that.
And there's no peace.
Who's peace for you, keeping?
Yeah.
You're making it easy for everybody else.
Mm-hmm. As it's slowly right, keep it. Yeah. You're making it easy for everybody else as it's slowly, right, destroying you.
Absolutely. And often then they're doing it to multiple people over the course of years,
the silence gives freedom to, for it to continue.
How do you counsel people who, in the process of starting to come back home to themselves,
to stop holding the piece for other people around you.
Let's just say it's a relationship,
where there's alcohol or drugs,
you're the one that's not saying anything,
so you're keeping the peace for them.
Right.
It's scary, because we're gonna have to confront things.
And it's gonna require some losses.
And some people are not gonna be happy with the new you.
People like the silent you.
They like the compliant you.
They like the dorm at you.
Who wouldn't like that?
Right.
So when you start getting some opinions
and start getting your voice
and not wanting to do some of the unhealthy things
you've been doing, not everyone is
going to celebrate. And that will be important for you to see who wants me whole and who prefers me
broken. I will have to start making some adjustments and there are a range of ways we can do it. So like
in the work chapter, we say there's one path for if I want to stay on this job and how do I restore myself and there's
another path where I need to leave this job. And in relationship with people
whether romantic or otherwise, some I will have to end and some it will have to
be different because I'm different and there can be a grieving there.
Wow.
In the book, you write about having a job
that was very toxic.
Can you describe what it felt like to walk into work
when you're in a toxic environment?
Yes.
It is so stressful and your body and your mind,
and that's even before you can do your work, right?
Just the Sunday scary driving in the red.
Yeah, it's terrible.
So then of course, you can't flow in a spirit of excellence
because you're battling all of these other dynamics.
And so I'd like to encourage people
to create a morning ritual so that you show up with
your cup already full. So can you give us an example? Yeah. So first of all wake up before you have
to get up. Okay, what does that mean? That means don't set your alarm for the time you have to jump out
of bed and jump in the shower. Because now you've already started your day frantic. Yes. So now I'm
going into a toxic place already feeling anxious. Okay. So now I'm going into a toxic place, already feeling anxious. Okay.
So you wanna wake up a little bit earlier
and then figure out what are the practices
that would nourish me.
For some people that will be listening to music,
I like to say,
and every season of your life come up with your theme song.
Yep.
So your theme song will get you in the right mindset,
doing some stretching, next to the bed,
body movement, exercise.
Some people go for early morning walk,
so then they already feel settled and float down.
Meditation and or prayer,
reading something inspirational,
and that can kind of create the mantra for your day.
Why is this matter?
Because when somebody's like, you have no idea,
I have this abusive boss and these jerks that I work with
and I can't quit and I've got bills to pay.
Don't sit here, Dr. Tama, and tell me
that I should freaking stretch.
Go for a walk, are you crazy woman?
Why does this matter? I want to introduce you to the part of you that is not an employee. Wow. You are more than your labor. Oh,
Yeah. So if we center our full session every week on your boss, then all you are is your boss's worker. And there is a you beyond your boss.
Wow. Is that true about being in a bad relationship? Yeah. Yeah. That they consume a lot of your
energy and time, but you were a person before you met them and whether this continues or not, you're going to be a person and
we want to
meet that person.
We want to nourish that person because
there is more to you than what they see and
a part of what they're responding to is they see the vastness of you and don't like it.
I have one question I forgot to ask you.
Is somebody is thinking I really should look into therapy?
What advice do you have about finding a therapist?
Yes.
About resources for people who cannot afford a therapist?
Yeah.
For those who don't have access to care,
I encourage you to look up your local universities
that have doctoral programs.
They have training clinics, which are less expensive.
I didn't mean to hit the table,
but that was a darn good suggestion.
Yes, I love that.
It's, you know, in LA, I teach at Pepperdine University.
We have a community clinic and it's a sliding scale.
You may have an advanced doctoral student
who has work with clients and they're under supervision,
so you're not just out there.
And then a big one is community care and community programming.
So a lot of places, for example,
the Association of Black Psychologists, they provide
online kind of drop-in virtual groups. The American Psychological Association has on our website a
lot of different resources and self-help tips. The American Psychological Association also has a
podcast where they cover a number of different topics.
So the resources are there.
Excellent.
And as always, we will link to all of them and to Dr. Brian's brand new, beautiful life-changing
Must Read book, Homecoming, overcome fear and trauma to reclaim your whole authentic self. You end every therapy session and every chapter of the book the same way.
And you also end every episode of the Homecoming podcast the same way. So I would love to have you, to invite you, to end our conversation with it. Beautiful. I invite your soul to tell
your heart, mind, body, and spirit. Welcome home.
Dr. Tamah Bryant, you are a gift from God to all of us.
Oh, thank you so much.
And I want each of you who are listening to know
you're worthy of the journey home.
Thank you so much for having me
and helping all of us to be the lightpost along the way
to get each other home.
Dr. Taima, that is such a beautiful vision.
Helping all of us to be the lightpost along the way to get each other home. Dr. Tama, that is such a beautiful vision,
helping all of us to be the lightposts along the way
to get each other home.
That's why I always remind you that I love you
and I believe in you.
And I believe in your ability to create a better life
and find your way back home to yourself.
Beautiful.
Oh, one more thing.
It's the legal language.
This podcast is presented solely for educational
and entertainment purposes.
It is not intended as a substitute
for the advice of a physician,
professional coach, psychotherapist,
or other qualified professional.
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